DuWayne is currently serving as one of two MDA Fill the Boot coordinators for his local, and he’s all in when it comes to lending tremendous support for individuals and families living in his area with muscular dystrophy and related life-threatening diseases. In 2017, Local 275 has raised nearly $21,000 for MDA, more than twice the total in 2016.

“It’s a great organization to be a part of,” DuWayne says. “I want to keep raising more money, and I want to make the Muscular Dystrophy Association more known and tell people about it.”

For DuWayne, it all comes down to helping kids. Last year, he joined MDA’s Muscle Walk in Green Bay for the first time, walking for Team Evan and supporting Evan Petersen, who lives with centronuclear myopathy. He met Evan at the MDA Wisconsin offices’ Boot Camp for fire fighters throughout the state.

“I did the Muscle Walk this past summer with [Evan] and signed up to be a part of his team,” DuWayne says. “I’m going to do it every year from here on. A lot of kids have touched my heart, and they’re all so awesome. But we just hit it off. I stay in contact with him a lot.”

DuWayne has also visited his local MDA Summer Camp as part of Fire Fighter Day — going so far as to rearrange a shift so he could be there for the kids. “Fire fighters have that certain personality where you just relate to kids. You’re with kids all the time — at schools and doing public education and fire safety,” he says. “Once you go to these events and meet the kids who have these diseases, it feels like something that you set time aside for and then make it happen.”

DuWayne’s other great passion is fitness. Normal marathons aren’t quite enough — and he admits that he does “some crazy stuff.” He competes in elite Spartan races and obstacle courses for Team Momentum, MDA’s training and endurance program that empowers individuals of all abilities to dedicate miles to help kids and adults with muscular dystrophy, ALS and related life-threatening diseases. Last year, DuWayne raised $1,000 for MDA through Team Momentum, handily besting his original goal of $350.

“I train all the time. It’s just my lifestyle. Being a professional fire fighter you kind of have to be fit and in shape,” he says. “Why not raise money for a great cause?”

The life of a professional fire fighter is nothing short of demanding, with 24-hour shifts of lifesaving work, which can take him away from his own children’s sporting games or family holidays. But he feels fortunate to be a fire fighter and everything that means for his community — including giving back to his community.

“I have three kids of my own,” he says, and life is crazy and fast-paced, but it’s just the right thing to do. It means a lot to me.”

Join DuWanye in his efforts to help MDA families live longer and grow stronger.